Tag: natural dyeing

  • Making a Mark

    IP - Making a Mark 1

    Craft has taken a back seat this year while I have worked on other poetry-related projects (like my Cards for Poets which you can buy in my shop) so it was fabulous to be asked to teach an eco-dyeing workshop. In the way that these things work, I had been thinking about doing some more eco-dyeing for a while. There is something magical about the whole process of foraging for leaves, rolling them into bundles and then cooking them in a pot.

    Early Sunday morning, I gathered up all my pots, rusty bits of metal, copper rods and steel cans and took them across town to Niddrie. Niddrie is a super cute suburb with a huge main street, shopping strip with trams running down the centre. Melbourne is so huge – I'm always discovering new places that I didn't even know existed. I think I could live here for the rest of my life and still not know it all. Exciting thought!

    IP - Making a Mark 2

    We were dyeing at a gorgeous house right next to Steel creek. After I had set up all the materials and put the pots on to boil (it can take a while in my ginormous steel pot) we went for a foraging walk along the creek.

    We started out barefoot on the grass where I ran through some sense awakening exercises I learnt as a nature connection mentor with Firekeepers. It's super easy to walk through the world, in our own heads, without noticing the details of our surroundings. I also went through the respectful foraging rules – take from healthy plants, take a small amount, don't take from the first plant you see, only take from plants if there are lots of them. We want the pants to continue to thrive!

    IP - Making a Mark 3

    Then it was back to the house for the fun of bundling our leaves on wool or heavy duty 300gsm watercolour paper. With eco dyeing, it's all about the leaves and how you place the on the paper. There are so many different options for expressing your creativity and individuality which I love about this particular craft. The leaves you choose, where you please them, the material you put them on and how you tie your bundles.

    You can steam or boil your bundles. Steaming gives you a background that is the same colour as your material (in this case wool or paper) with hopefully fabulous leaf prints. Boiling adds colours from the leaves to the water which in turn soaks into the fabric and colours it. You can also choose to add more leaves to the pot. We had three pots on the stove.

    And then there's the pots themselves. Aluminium pots brighten your colours, copper pots bring out greens and steel pot don't have an effect. In the small aluminium pot we added some extra purple plum leaves and sticks from my street to get some purple happening. We also added some rusty nails and a horseshoe which darken colours. In the big steel pot went cinerea leaves (for orange) and other gum leaves to make a brown (we ended up with a purple/brown). In the aluminium steamer stack we just added water.

    One of the great things about eco-dyeing is that it is different every time because the leaves you choose are little time capsules that reflect that moment in the plant's life – the sunshine, the rain and the soil in which it grew. The water you use has an effect on the result as do all the little decisions you make along the way.

    IP - Making a Mark 4

    IP - Making a Mark 5

    And then after you wait for your bundles to cook, you have the surprise and joy of opening your little gifts to yourself!

    IP - Making a Mark 6

    The paper bundles all spread out and drying! Did you know that you can iron watercolour paper? Yep, it's true!

    So there you have it, another successful eco-dyeing workshop!

     

     

  • Sing Along

    IP - Sing Along 1

    IP - Sing Along 2

    IP - Sing Along 3

    IP - Sing Along 4

    IP - Sing Along 5

    Last year during lockdown I compiled a collection of songs that I learnt to sing at Firekeepers' events in and around Melbourne. Some of the songs were even learnt in online sessions when I hosted song circles with my ten year old daughter. I had a lot of fun tracking down the origins of the songs, finding their creators and the original lyrics. I also included links to audio recording where I could so anyone who reads the  songbook can learn any of the songs that appeal to them. I can't read music so being able to hear a song is the way I learn it.

    I printed out a copy of the songbook and bound it using some brown coloured cardboard I bought. That songbook was left with a good friend when I went to visit her so I needed to make a new copy. And being me, I decided to make a few (five actually) while I was at it. I love making more than one of something. I wanted to use some gorgeous paper for the covers and I had the brainwave of eco-dying the paper. I really don't know why I hadn't thought of it earlier. 

    So all that happened last year and the books have been sitting on my desk ever since. I did bind one back in February to give to a friend's daughter for her birthday but the rest have been waiting for me to get around to them. This being the impromptu weekend of craft, I finally made them into books.

    I can't wait to take one away with me next week when we go camping again with the Firekeepers' community. It's been 15 month since the last camp and we're all hanging out to be back in the bush, running wild.

     

  • Still: Books

    IP - Still Books 1

    IP - Still Books 2

    IP - Still Books 3

    IP - Still Books 4

    This book contains the poem, Still: Books, that inspired my process zine, Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal. The zine details my creative process for writing this particular poem. There's an art to writing a poem for publication. It's an art I am struggling to learn. But I keep on trying and keep piling up the rejection letters. In the meantime, I'm making books and making art with my 'failures'.

    I always felt Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal was the first volume of a two volume set of books. Volume 2 of course, would contain the poem referred to in Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal.

    After making notebooks with eco-dyed paper covers I was itching to make one containing my poetry. And here it is. If you're interested in buying one, you'll find copies of Still: Books and Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal in my shop.

     

  • Noted

    IP - Noted 1

    IP - Noted 2

    IP - Noted 3

    IP - Noted 4

    IP - Noted 5

    After the success of my first notebook with an eco-dyed cover I just had to make some more. Being me, I got rather carried away and used a whole pad of A3 watercolour paper to make eight A6 sized notebooks.

    I feel like I'll be making more of these in future and can't believe it took me so long to get around to eco-dyeing paper and turning it into books!

     

  • Oops!

    IP - Oops 1

    IP - Oops 2

    IP - Oops 3

    IP - Oops 4

    IP - Oops 5

    I was trying to make an eco-dyed silk scarf in blue / grey tones to go with my blue leather journal, blue eco-dyed scarf and knitted blue / grey fingerless gloves. I've got a thing for matching my stationery to my accessories at the moment.

    I gathered some leaves from native trees and then soaked them in water with a splash of rusty nail infused vinegar (mmm, sounds so tasty doesn't it?). I got impatient and only left them in the bucket for a couple of days.

    Rashly I decided to dye all there of the silk scarves I had left for dyeing. I was feeling bold and confident. What could possibly go wrong?

    I put them in a stainless steel pot with some more iron water. I boiled them for a few hours then left them outside in the pot to mature.

    Finally I took them out and unbundled them. And ALL the scarves had been dyed beautiful shades of brown / red / pink.

    Oops!

     

  • It’s Beanie Time

    IP - Wool 1

    IP - Wool 2

    IP  - Wool 3

    IP - Wool 4

    IP - Wool 5

    I can't remember when I dyed these balls of wool. It was at least a couple of years ago in the midst of my eco dyeing frenzy. At the time I was dyeing anything and everything I could get my hands on. I was also doing  straight up dyeing. Most of these balls of wall have been dyed with plants stuck in a pot but there is a ball which I used to wrap around an eco-dyed bundled of something or other. It's my favourite.

    I'm pretty sure the dark brown is from walnut shells. The multi-coloured ball has some orange from cinerea and then whatever else was in the pot with the wool. The ball was originally tied around an eco-dyed bundle. Any string (or wool) you use to bind your bundles gets dyed in the pot. It's a beautiful example of accidental or incidental art.

    IP - Wool 6

    I've been wanting to make a beanie to match the eco-dyed scarf you can see in the pictures. The merino wool scarf was my first ever successful attempt at eco-dyeding after many failures. The beautiful fingerless gloves were a birthday present from a very dear friend. She hand-spun the wool and then knitted the gloves. With a scarf and gloves all I was missing was a beanie. With winter coming, it's time to do something about my lack of beanie situation. Luckily for me, I had thoughtfully dyed these balls of wool on a previous occasion.

    For some reason when I first dyed these balls, I didn't like the results. Crazy, right? They look incredible even if  I do say so myself. I think at the time they didn't turn out how I was expecting which blinded me to their beauty. With the passing of time, I've forgotten my original expectation and can finally see them in their true glory. Sometimes the only difference between success and failure is time.

     

  • Slow Stitching

    IP - Vest 1

    IP - Vest 2

    IP - Vest 3

    IP - Vest 4

    IP - Vest 5

    When I make something, I like to imagine the finished product. Spend time thinking about how it will look and dream up creative solutions for making it. I imagine myself using it, I imagine how it will feel in my hands and what it will look like. I imagine myself, dreamily sitting on the couch with a cup of tea, peacefully making while the girls play happily (the reality doesn't always match the dream of course!).

    But.  (There's always a but isn't there?) As I'm beginning to realise, there's only so much imagining and planing you can do. There comes a point where you just have to dive right in. I'm sure I've blogged about this before – clearly this is a lesson I keep coming back to!

    This beautiful eoc-dyed wool is slowly turning into a vest, with a little help from my friends. Thanks Kate for helping make the pattern and prove the seams. A crafty friend is worth her weight in gold I tell you!

    It took me ages to get the pattern just right. Then ages more just sitting looking at the wool, figuring out where to cut it to get the best effect. It was scary, putting scissors to fabric I had hand dyed. My efforts to create beautiful patterns made it so precious. Very different to buying fabric from the shop and cutting it up willy nilly.

    Now I'm on the home straight – deciding what colour embroidery thread to use for my hand stitching and whether or not to make it reversible.

    I'm gonna keep on going slowly. A stitch here and there, sit back and take it in and then maybe do some more. This is the part I love the most, the mindful sewing together of pieces to make a whole.

    What's your favourite part of the making process?

  • Slow Stitching

    IP - Vest 1

    IP - Vest 2

    IP - Vest 3

    IP - Vest 4

    IP - Vest 5

    When I make something, I like to imagine the finished product. Spend time thinking about how it will look and dream up creative solutions for making it. I imagine myself using it, I imagine how it will feel in my hands and what it will look like. I imagine myself, dreamily sitting on the couch with a cup of tea, peacefully making while the girls play happily (the reality doesn't always match the dream of course!).

    But.  (There's always a but isn't there?) As I'm beginning to realise, there's only so much imagining and planing you can do. There comes a point where you just have to dive right in. I'm sure I've blogged about this before – clearly this is a lesson I keep coming back to!

    This beautiful eoc-dyed wool is slowly turning into a vest, with a little help from my friends. Thanks Kate for helping make the pattern and prove the seams. A crafty friend is worth her weight in gold I tell you!

    It took me ages to get the pattern just right. Then ages more just sitting looking at the wool, figuring out where to cut it to get the best effect. It was scary, putting scissors to fabric I had hand dyed. My efforts to create beautiful patterns made it so precious. Very different to buying fabric from the shop and cutting it up willy nilly.

    Now I'm on the home straight – deciding what colour embroidery thread to use for my hand stitching and whether or not to make it reversible.

    I'm gonna keep on going slowly. A stitch here and there, sit back and take it in and then maybe do some more. This is the part I love the most, the mindful sewing together of pieces to make a whole.

    What's your favourite part of the making process?

  • Dyeing with Avocado Stones

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 1

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 2

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 3

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 4

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 5

    I'm feeling very pleased with my first attempt at creating a dye bath from plant materials. The colours on the silk from the avocado stone are gorgeous!

    The method I used is from the wonderful book, Botanical Dye At Your Fingertips by Rebecca Desnos. Clear instructions and beautiful photos make this book a delight to read and use. I would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to dive into the world of using botanical ingredients for creating natural dyes.

    I usually eco dye which is a great, big one pot extravaganza. Grab some leaves, bundle, throw in pot and wait. Creating a dye bath takes a lot longer. There's a lot of heating and cooling, straining and waiting when dyeing with avocado stones. At first I was annoyed by all the heat and wait. I was wondering if all the fuss was worth it. 

    Well, when I saw the colours, I fell in love with the process. I can't wait to eat more avocados so I can do some more dyeing!

     

  • Dyeing with Avocado Stones

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 1

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 2

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 3

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 4

    IP - Avocado Dyeing 5

    I'm feeling very pleased with my first attempt at creating a dye bath from plant materials. The colours on the silk from the avocado stone are gorgeous!

    The method I used is from the wonderful book, Botanical Dye At Your Fingertips by Rebecca Desnos. Clear instructions and beautiful photos make this book a delight to read and use. I would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to dive into the world of using botanical ingredients for creating natural dyes.

    I usually eco dye which is a great, big one pot extravaganza. Grab some leaves, bundle, throw in pot and wait. Creating a dye bath takes a lot longer. There's a lot of heating and cooling, straining and waiting when dyeing with avocado stones. At first I was annoyed by all the heat and wait. I was wondering if all the fuss was worth it. 

    Well, when I saw the colours, I fell in love with the process. I can't wait to eat more avocados so I can do some more dyeing!